Supposedly, the children are looking at a museum cell phone tour app. It is so easy to believe, however, that they are ignoring the great work of art while using their phones. It's a shame the photographer didn't take a picture of the kids looking at the same painting...

Here is another picture of the same group of kids looking at a different painting. No phones in sight. So, maybe they were checking out a tour app in the first photo?

I had a similar situation myself not too long ago. I was taking a video of fireworks I saw and after a short while I realized I was watching them on teh screen o my phone (to keep them in frame) and not the actual firework! I quickly stopped filming (I had enough footage) and reverted to watching it live.

Taking a video has its advantages though, as we can relive that moment on our TV (ideally) at home and don't have to rely on our brain to provide good replay footage.

BTW, the image of the kids could be showing the kids using the museums app to look at more information about the painting behind them... We can't be sure.

My one wish for the DVD Profiler online database: Ban or remove the disc-level profiles of TV season sets. It completely screws up/inflates the CLT.FACT: Imdb is WRONG 70% of the time! Misspelled cast, incomplete cast, wrong cast/crew roles. So for those who want DVD Profiler to be "as perfect as Imdb", good luck with that.Stop adding UNIT crew! They're invalid credits. Stop it!

The cellphone addiction is depicted nicely in this 2013 viral video that got 50 million views. The lady in the first shot made this video, which shows that everywhere she goes, she sees people who are stuck to their little screens.